后路脊柱手术俯卧位术后短暂性股神经病变:说明性病例。

David J Caldwell, Cecilia Dalle Ore, Alexa Semonche, Ninad Bhat, David Collins, Frank Panza, Daniel A Lim, Nina I Garga, Doris D Wang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:脊柱手术后神经功能缺损是一个值得关注的问题。确定病因至关重要,因为这决定了治疗方案。作者报告了一过性双侧股神经病变的病例,该病例在俯卧位下行脊柱融合翻修术并截骨术后,保守治疗得到改善。观察:一名69岁男性,既往L2-S1后路融合术,表现为背部疼痛,影像学显示假关节和硬件故障。患者接受了第一期L2-4侧体间融合术,1周后进行了t10 -骨盆后路脊柱内固定融合术翻修,并在L1-2和L2-3行双侧后柱截骨术。术后,患者双侧股四头肌力量为0/5,大腿内侧和膝盖有片状感觉丧失,无疼痛。影像学检查未发现任何压缩原因。最可能的病因是股神经在腹股沟韧带水平或以下的周围神经病变,保守治疗后病情有所改善。经验教训:仔细的神经学检查和影像学检查可以确定周围神经损伤,与术后神经根损伤或血肿相比,周围神经损伤可以通过保守治疗来解决,而术后神经根损伤或血肿则需要立即手术探查。https://thejns.org/doi/10.3171/CASE25239。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Transient postoperative femoral neuropathy following prone positioning for posterior spine surgery: illustrative case.

Background: Neurological deficits are a concern following spine surgeries. Determining the etiology is critical as this dictates management options. The authors present the case of a transient bilateral femoral neuropathy following prone positioning for a revision spinal fusion with osteotomies that improved with conservative management.

Observations: A 69-year-old male with a prior L2-S1 posterior fusion presented with back pain, and imaging showed pseudarthrosis and hardware failure. He underwent a first-stage L2-4 lateral interbody fusion, and 1 week later a revision T10-pelvis posterior spinal instrumented fusion and bilateral posterior column osteotomies at L1-2 and L2-3. Postoperatively, he had 0/5 power in his bilateral quadriceps muscles with patchy sensory loss in the medial thigh and knees without pain. Imaging did not reveal any compressive cause. The most likely etiology was a peripheral neuropathy of the femoral nerve at or below the level of the inguinal ligament, which was managed conservatively with subsequent improvement.

Lessons: A careful neurological examination and imaging review can determine a peripheral nerve injury that is expected to resolve with conservative management compared with a postsurgical nerve root injury or hematoma that would benefit from immediate surgical exploration. https://thejns.org/doi/10.3171/CASE25239.

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